Swedish hospitals are overwhelmed, medical director calls for help



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According to the medical director, there is an urgent need for specialist nurses and other hospital staff in health facilities in the Swedish capital, where intensive care units are full of coronavirus-infected patients.

“We need help,” Björn Eriksson, health director for the Stockholm region, told a news conference.

Eriksson also called on the population to more closely follow the government’s epidemiological recommendations, thus easing the health system.

“It is enough. It can not be worth as much to drink after work and fight for Christmas presents … The consequences are horrible,” he stressed.

Stockholm and the surrounding region are among the worst affected areas in Sweden with 2,836 deaths.

Due to the sudden increase in the number of infected, the government announced on Wednesday that it would ask parliament for a mandate to introduce quarantine measures, such as closing shopping centers and gyms.

Sweden has opted for a controversial solution with relatively looser restrictions in fighting the epidemic. Across the country, leadership has focused on recommendations and individual responsibility rather than bans.

However, as the epidemic accelerated, Sweden has been forced to tighten restrictions since November, introducing, among other things, an eight-person concentration restriction and banning the sale of alcohol after 10 p.m. From December 7 to January 6, distance education was introduced. However, there is no quarantine or mandatory use of masks.

In a country of about 10 million inhabitants, there are already more than 300,000 identified infected people, of which 7296 have died from the disease.

Cover image: Getty Images



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